P R = Perception Reputation
P R = Perception Reputation
Friends, generally the term PR relates to Public Relations but does PR stands for Public Relations only or this term can be used in other references also?
‘YES’….
We can use ‘PR’ for ‘PRESS RELATIONS’, ‘PRESS RELEASE’, ‘PERSONAL RELATIONS’,
‘PROFESSIONAL RELATIONS’, and now for PERCEPTION-REPUTATION also
which is one of the core activities of public relations nowadays - “Managing
Perception & Reputation” of the clients. Hence, there is a need to
understand ‘Perception’ and ‘Reputation’ also.
P
for Public = Perception:
Perception
is how we think about a particular person, situation, event, or anything for
that matter based on the stimuli we receive and the feelings and thoughts that
we have about that entity. Edward de Bono Physician, author, and originator
of the term lateral thinking said that “Perception is real
even when it is not reality”.
Perception
means perceiving, i.e., giving meaning to the environment around us. It can be
defined as a process which involves seeing, receiving, selecting, organizing,
interpreting and giving meaning to the environment. Perception is an
intellectual, cognitive or psychological process and also becomes
a subjective process as different people may perceive the same event
differently. People can be at the same place, at the same time and still
come away with different opinions about what actually happened and, because
everyone perceives the world in different ways, each person thinks that their
version of events is correct.
Communicating and managing perceptions remain
significant challenges. Our words and actions may be misinterpreted,
misquoted and /or taken out of context. But if we want to shape others’
perceptions, we must take control of the messages we send and the actions we
perform. We cannot succeed without consistently and accurately telegraphing our
thoughts and intentions.
Perception Management
Perception management is a type of strategy
that is aimed at guiding the motives, emotions, and conclusions of another
party by means of using different approaches to alter that party’s perception
of past events and the projections of future events. This particular type of
strategy has been used in military operations in attempts to gain advantages
over enemies, and has also found use in the business world among competitors.
The goal is to alter the perception of the opposing party in a way that
provides the manager with an advantage that can be used successfully to
score a victory or otherwise defeat that opposing party. The process of
perception management includes the selective use of available data. In this
scenario, certain facts are presented completely and concisely, while others
are either presented only in part of are left out altogether. Doing so makes it
easier to create a particular perception that can be sold to consumers, the
citizens of a given country, or to a rival of some sort, assuming the opposing
party is not privy to and does not discover the omissions.
Therefore,
the art and science of perception management is all about how entities create
a favorable impression of themselves to their stakeholders be it
prospective or existing employees, shareholders, consumers, and society at
large. Thus, organizations have to ensure that they are perceived well by their
stakeholders.
Perception Management operations have
become a mainstream part of information management procedures in a variety of
modern organisations. Perception Management can be carried out as part of a
wider international Public Diplomacy initiative between governments, or it
can function as a tool of domestic Public Affairs communications between a
government and its citizens.
R for Relation = Reputation:
Although,
reputation is often difficult to define since the perception of what is and
what is not reputable is in “the eye of the beholder”, a variety of definitions
of reputation have been offered from a number of different academic and
professional backgrounds……
“It takes many good deeds to build a
good reputation, and only one bad one to lose it.”
-
- Benjamin Franklin
“Character is like a tree and reputation
like its shadow. The shadow is what we think of it; the tree is the real
thing.”
-
- Abraham Lincoln
“It takes 20 years to build a reputation and five minutes
to ruin it. If you think about that, you’ll do things differently.”
-
- Warren Buffet
“Reputation
is the general estimation in which one is held by the public.”
-
- American
Heritage Dictionary
“A
brand is owned by the company, while reputation is owned by stakeholders.”
-
- Unknown
“Great reputations are built through consistently meeting
stakeholder expectations, dedication to your mission, and the element of
surprise.”
-
- Unknown
Reputation
is the subjective qualitative belief a person has regarding a brand, person,
company, product, or service. Reputation is the key to success and is best defined as a third-party perception of you, or
your brands, and character. Reputation is an expectation of future
behavior based on past experiences, which means first impressions and your
stakeholder's experiences with your brand are critical to developing a positive
reputation. Reputation can mean different things to different people. If you
ask 100 people what reputation means to them, you are likely hear some of its
synonyms.
Reputation is a matter of perception.
An organisation’s overall reputation is a function of its reputation among its
various stakeholders i.e. investors, customers, suppliers, employees,
regulators, politicians, non-governmental organizations, the communities in
which the organisation operates, in specific categories e.g.
product quality, corporate governance, employee relations, customer service,
intellectual capital, financial performance, handling of environmental and
social issues. A strong positive reputation among stakeholders across multiple
categories will result in a strong positive reputation for the organisation
overall.
As
per “RepTrak Model” of The Reputation Institute, there are Seven Dimensions or Drivers of
Reputation: Products & Services, Innovation, Leadership, Workplace
Environment, Citizenship, Governance, and Financial Performance. As
per Schreiber there are “Six Pillars of Reputation”: Differentiation,
Relevance, Esteem, Expectations, Knowledge and Experience to know how the
company or organisation is perceived by its stakeholders on each of these pillars. Charles
Fombrun (USA) and Cees Van Riel (Netherlands) model “Reputation
Quotient” measures Six Drivers contributing to Corporate Reputation
i.e. Emotional Appeal; Products & Services; Vision & Leadership;
Workplace Environment; Financial Performance; and Social Responsibility.
Reputation Management
Reputation management refers to influencing and controlling
an individual’s or business’s reputation. Reputation management
is making the effort to influence what and how people think of a person or brand.
Sharing positive information about a brand or person to increase positive
sentiment is an effective strategy for Reputation Management. Reputation management in its
simplest form involves the following three steps:
· Build: You must first BUILD up the reputation of
your organisation to establish yourself in your particular industry.
· Maintain: This is daily maintenance of reputation
and is what is meant to keep a organisation’s good standing in place. Organisations with an established brand presence will use this the
most.
· Recover: This is for an organisation who has
earned or received a negative reputation, whether in the general public or
within their own target audience. Experts in reputation management are trained
to insert positive pieces of information to “push down” the negative press or
make it seem less significant.
PR = Public (Perception) Relations
(Reputation)
Varied
definitions of public relations have been given by academicians, public
relations professionals and international bodies of public relations
practitioners. Out of those many, I have just taken the following five
definitions that also conveys PR as Perception and Reputation Management.
PR
is an attempt by information, persuasion, and adjustment to engineer public
support for an activity, cause, movement or institution.
- - Edward
L. Bernays
Public
Relations is the art of getting believed.
-
- Ivy Ledbetter Lee
Public
relations is the management function that identifies, establishes, and
maintains mutually beneficial relationships between an organization and the
various publics on whom its success or failure depends.
-
- Cutlip, Center, &
Broom
Public relations is
the business of creating and changing attitudes.
- - Harold Burson
Public Relations is the discipline which looks after reputation, with
the aim of earning understanding and support and influencing opinion and
behaviour. It is the planned and sustained effort to establish and maintain
goodwill and mutual understanding between an organisation and its publics.
- Chartered
Institute of Public Relations – UK
To
conclude:
Basic
function of public relations is to help
build trust and credibility with groups of public that are important for the
organization. What people think about the organisation much depends
on views of others (perception). Public Relations is a discipline
that looks after perception and reputation of an organisation, with the aim of
earning understanding and support (perception) and influencing opinion
and behaviour (reputation). It is the planned and sustained effort to establish
and maintain goodwill and mutual understanding between an organisation and its
publics.’ The end result of public relations as perception and reputation
management is creating goodwill of the organisation and mutual understanding
between the target public and the organisation.
Perception and Reputation Management is an
appealing concept for public relations professionals as it links public
relations to the organisation it represents, and suggests a dialogue with the
top management around a topic of pressing importance. Perception and reputation
is not to be viewed or managed in isolation, but as part of the incessant
public relations strategy of the organisation.
Thank You :)
Great article.
ReplyDeleteYes, reputation, to sustain, must be managed constantly in line with changingscenerio. Otherwise, it is very fragile. And here lies the role of PR's prudence.
ReplyDeleteAnyway, the article is beneficial for learners.
Very well & comprehensibly written.
ReplyDeleteWah Greatam
ReplyDeleteVery well written!
ReplyDeleteVery nice thoughts, also you may like to check my tweet on PR https://twitter.com/Joydeep2020/status/1263753561051000832/photo/1
ReplyDelete